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Archive for June 26th, 2010

Secret accounts, pain and betrayal: Why money breeds conflict with your honey

Posted by Administrator on June 26, 2010

When Issac Otieno married 11 years ago, he was an accountant, earning about Sh50,000 every month. His former wife had just graduated from university and was job-hunting.

“I shouldered all our financial responsibilities and even gave my wife a monthly allowance for clothes, toiletries and other needs,” Mr Otieno begins.

For the two years that his wife stayed without a “proper” job, he says that they rarely disagreed about money, and that his wife gladly made do with what was available. But that was until she landed a job that paid almost three times more than his.

Mr Otieno claims that after just a few months into the job, his wife started to “disrespect” him.

“She occasionally accused me of lacking ambition because I had been in the same job for years and kept pestering me to either look for another job or demand for a pay rise,” he says.

It still galls him that whenever his wife bought something, she would make a point of letting almost everyone they knew, especially family, that she had bought the item herself.

He cannot count the number of times that he went to work without breakfast because his wife had either already left for work, was busy reading for an exam or completing an assignment since she had enrolled to study for a Master’s degree as soon as she got the job.

Without consulting

But these are not the only woes that besieged this disillusioned man. He says that his wife started making major financial decisions without consulting him. For instance, she transferred their two children to a higher cost school and moved the family to a more expensive neighbourhood. He says that when he protested, she retorted that she would pay the school fees and the rent herself, so he had nothing to be worried about.
“Within just a few months, I was feeling really worthless because my wife wasn’t hiding the fact that she did not need me,” he says.

Unable to find formal employment, Kimani finally settled for a taxi driver’s job three years ago.

“The job doesn’t pay much, so I am unable to pay for my children’s school fees or pay rent,” he says, adding that it still pains him that his wife does not let him forget that he is a “failure”.

Interestingly, several other men had stories with a similar ring — that of women who develop an inflated ego when they either start earning more than the man or when they become sole breadwinners.

“Women who have their own money are pure trouble, they are double trouble if they earn more than their husbands because they think it gives them the license to do whatever they want,” shoots Benson Kyalo, a 35-year-old, who has been married for five years and has two children.

Mr Kyalo says that he deliberately set up a beauty salon for his wife to discourage her from seeking formal employment because he feared that if she started making more money than him, she would become “kichwa ngumu” (big-headed) like one of his friend’s wife.

But women say that it is men’s insecurity that creates problems.

“Men are intimidated by women who earn more than they do,” says Brenda Kigan (not her real name). Brenda had to give up a high profile job at a local bank two years ago because her husband of eight years just couldn’t reconcile with the fact that she was taking home more money than he was. She claims that when she got the promotion, which came with a significant pay rise, he did not bother to hide his displeasure.

“He started picking fights and coming home late, and when I questioned his behaviour, he would retort that I had no right to control him just because I was earning more than he was,” she says.

He would also accuse her of caring about her job more than him and their two children whenever she got home late or had to work over a weekend.

Unable to withstand any more the petty squabbles that were threatening to take apart their once stable marriage, Brenda handed in her resignation and got a lower paying administrator’s job at a college.

But why does this happen? Shouldn’t couples welcome added income in these hard economic times?

According to marriage counsellor Salome Mwangi, money empowers and with it comes financial freedom, which goes on to open up numerous opportunities that had been beyond the reach of the jobless spouse. 

Payslip contents

“When the dependant spouse starts earning their own money, the provider is forced to acknowledge that they aren’t needed, that they aren’t indispensable — some individuals find this difficult to reconcile with,” she explains.

Interviews with married individuals also revealed that a significant number have no idea how much their spouses earn.

“I meet all the financial obligations at home — I pay the rent, buy food and pay school fees for the children; why should I disclose how much I earn to my wife?” wonders Simon Motari when asked whether his wife is conversant with his payslip’s contents.

But men are not the only ones keeping their spouses in the dark about how much they make. Mary Mumbua says that every year, for the last four years, her employer has given her pay increments which her husband of five years knows nothing about. In the company’s last financial year, she received a bonus of over Sh70,000. Her husband never got wind of it. What does she do with the extra money?

“I have an account that my husband knows nothing about,” is her prompt response, adding that the savings are for “a rainy day”.

The danger of this, warns marriage counsellor Salome, is that it sows seeds of distrust which steadily poison the marriage until the couple starts to question why they are together.

Secrecy also makes it difficult, even impossible, for the couple to plan and invest for their future together.  

Other financial secrets that today’s couples are keeping from each other include assets such as parcels of land and rental houses. In most cases, secrets of this magnitude come into the open when the dishonest spouse dies, making the living partner to wonder whether the marriage had been a sham.

Source: Daily Nation

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Dating the single father

Posted by Administrator on June 26, 2010

By JACKSON BIKO
Posted Friday, June 25 2010 at 15:53

Let’s face it, the single father is an underdog, mostly ignored, underrated, and in some cases, even blamed by society which has harped on for so long – and so hard – about single mothers that mentioning a single father is like mentioning a disease that was (supposedly) expunged long ago. But single fathers (amazingly) still walk the earth and they find themselves in that situation through either a fault of their own or others. They face the same challenges like single mothers – sometimes even worse because they are not as equipped with those inherently maternal parenting tools as women are. And for this reason, they stagger through parenthood, clueless and quite often bewildered by this gargantuan responsibility. Through all this, they ask for no sympathy or even medals even though some of them are truly deserving. Guided by the noble intentions of raising a child in virtue and good sense, they make mistakes as is only natural.

In fact, they make many mistakes that are graver than literally throwing out the baby with the bathwater…or lacing the milk with a drop of wine to have them sleep soundly. But such is parenthood, they say, if you can’t find fun in it, then you might as well try pig farming. So is it a struggle, this massive responsibility of raising a tiny tot on one’s own? It must be. Is it redeeming, raising a child who is well-adjusted and not some serial killer with crossed eyes? “Massively so,” they chorus.

But like in the quaint Garden of Eden stories, such milieux are never quite complete – or, if men are candid enough – interesting without the presence of a woman. Most women come into the single father’s life with sympathy, and quiet often – and unfortunately – a manual. They come in wanting to be part of his situation (which they imagine is somewhat broken and hopeless), a situation they can fix like everything else that is unbroken but which women want to fix nevertheless. It’s as if they are being summoned by unforeseen powers to “fix” it. Although, to be fair, most just want to fit in, some come in with a long prescription on how that cookie will crumble when they are done with it. The results, sadly, are always disastrous if not all together embarrassing…for her.

Here is a fact that our women need to learn; if dating a man is hard enough, then dating a single father must be like dating two children. It’s like walking a minefield (or is that a “poopfield”) and that calls for careful treading. Four single fathers interviewed informed this piece and together, they offer pearls of wisdom that will help women date single fathers without remarking with a long face, “I feel like I’m competing for your attention with your child.” Which no doubt makes him feel like he’s dating two children.

Easy with all the kissing and touching.

Children take great exception at you kissing and touching their dad in their presence. This is how children think, “Daddy belongs to me, and only me. There is no room for anyone else. Anyone who is kissing my daddy is trying to take him away from me and is the axis of evil who I shall deal with by hating or throwing up on.”

Farouk, 35 and father of a six-year-old girl says, “I noticed that every time my girlfriend showed physical affection towards me, my daughter would become withdrawn and sulk. She must have felt that she was taking me away from her, and so I asked my girlfriend to go easy with all that kissing and touching infront of my daughter.” Joy Wango, a child therapist says, “It’s normal for children to behave that way especially when their lives are centred around their fathers,” Joy calls it passive aggression. So the only person who is allowed to say, “ I just want to cuddle,” should be the baby…er, the real baby, not you.

You can’t afford to be the bad cop

Granted, there are children who are spoilt and ill-mannered. Children raised and weaned by Homer Simpson. But if this child belongs to the man you are dating, you perhaps should save on those disciplinary ambitions for your own child. Felix Njenga, father of a 10-year-old son talks about an experience. “I dated a woman who thought I was spoiling my son, that I had lost control and he was headed to hell. So one day, when my son was messing around as he usually does, she shouted at him angrily, scared the poor guy into tears. We broke up a month later because she always felt like my son was a brat and it was upon her to instill some discipline.” He says. Felix adds that it’s improper for a girlfriend to discipline her man’s child because it’s a “delicate” matter that should be left to him, the father. So if the man you are dating wants to watch his kid turn into an unschooled miscreant, please let him.

Don’t be jealous of the ex

Most women imagine that, just because the man has a good relationship with the mother of his child, the two have a romantic involvement. Tim, divorced father of a four-year-old daughter and an eight-year-old son says one of the things that put him off dating is the “suspicion and insecurity” with which the women he dates regard his relationship with his ex-wife. “There is a very good reason the marriage ended but she still remains the mother of my kids, and that calls for a certain level of civility between us. The woman I’m dating should not feel insecure about that.” Felix says that the women he dates almost always want to hear gory stories about his ex-wife for them to feel secure. Sometimes the person with the gory tales might be the man himself.

Don’t insist on sleeping over…at least not yet

You’ve been dating him for four months; you think it’s time you started sleeping over at his. But he seems reluctant, and typically you start asking the question women ask when they want to rock the boat a little, “where is this relationship going?” Truth is, it won’t go anywhere if you keep up with the gallant wolf cries. All the single fathers agree that it’s in bad taste to have a woman over for the night with the kids in the house. Felix says: “Unless the relationship has got to a point where I see a future together, I wouldn’t allow my son to see different women spend the night at my house. I think it’s a bad way to socialise a child, and it’s a shame when women take that personally.” In short, there is more to a relationship than sleeping over at his place.

Fighting for time with the child

Every single father blocks some time for father-child bonding. It’s called quality time. If it was meant to involve the third part (read, you) then they would have changed the name to quantity time. Tim says, “ When a woman I’m seeing starts to compete for time with my child, when she starts causing a stink because I’m spending more time with my child than her then I know for sure that I won’t be seeing her for much longer.” It’s not a competition, and if you turn it into one, the child will clearly be the victor. So let the man do his fatherly duties, support him to be a good father and while you are at it, don’t ask – even in moments of utter frustration, “ Between Martin [his child] and I, who would you save from a burning house.” There is only one answer to that question and you don’t want to hear it.

Don’t try to mother his child

Tanui, whose wife passed on a two years ago leaving him with a nine-year-old daughter says, “It’s very tricky for a woman you are dating to try and take the place of the mother of your child. I have experienced women who naturally want to take on that role by trying to act like they are the mother of my child and the reaction they get from my daughter is very ugly. Even if I remarried, my daughter knows she will always have one mother and she is dead.”

Felix also adds that it’s quite endearing to try and bond with the child, but it should be done delicately and moderately, “When you try and force yourself on a child by insisting on taking them to lunch, or the salon or wherever else , it makes the child suspicious. If a child wants to warm up to you, they will even if you see them only once a month.”

Inappropriate behaviour

So you smoke and have the language of a truck driver? That’s fine, but not in front of the children, the single dads say. “I smoke,” Felix admits, “But never in the house or in the car when my children are in. If I’m dating a smoker, I would want them to respect this rule. It’s not like I’m asking you to quit smoking, just not when the children are around, it’s not only a health issue but, I don’t want to give my children the impression that smoking is cool.” Or give his son the impression that dating women who smoke is the new cool.

On cursing and using foul language, Farouk says it all boils down to common sense. “Anybody will tell you that using curse words in front of children is irresponsible.”

The common feeling expressed by these single fathers is that if you want to date one, you will need to have patience and good sense. No petty jealousies, no fits of hysteria (because there is only one child in that arrangement), no walking around in his house – no matter how entertaining that might seem- with nothing on but a magician’s hat and high heels and certainly no potty mouth. Granted, these conditions might seem like a pesky check list before visiting the outer space, but they are vital because they bring sobriety in a relationship that involves three or more people, some who are allowed to behave their age.

Source: Daily Nation

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I did not want to live a lie, says former Catholic priest who opted to marry

Posted by Administrator on June 26, 2010

Bishop Theuri at Egerton University’s Njoro campus, where he teaches. Photo/JOSEPH KIHERI

Bishop Theuri at Egerton University’s Njoro campus, where he teaches. Photo/JOSEPH KIHERI

By JOYCE BOKE
Posted Saturday, June 26 2010 at 11:03

Bishop Matthew Theuri has refused to live a lie. After serving for years as a saintly Roman Catholic priest – carrying the crucifix even to the bathroom – he quit the celibacy club and married Maryanne Nyambura, a woman he had fallen in love with at first sight.

Now a cleric of the Ecumenical Catholic Church, Bishop Theuri is also a consummate husband and father of four. He contravened the church’s doctrine of celibacy but he says celibacy is not a doctrine but a condition that should be optional.

Born the second of three children in Nyeri in 1955, Bishop Theuri, who is also a lecturer at Egerton University, didn’t really know his father because he died in the struggle for independence. His mother was a casual labourer, and the young Theuri worked as a herdsboy to augment her earnings.

“I would wake up, ring the bell for people to attend Mass, after which I would milk the cows, clean their sheds and then take them to the grazing field,” he said.

The influence of two Italian priests – Fathers Leornado Sella and Joseph Bragnolo – was to change his life forever.

“They were the kindest people I ever met, very humble, and they treated everyone with love and showed care to every creature that came their way,” he said. “I wanted to be like them some day, and at that tender age, I made up my mind to be a priest.”

Loved books

He loved books and reading and would devour any written material that found its way to his hands, something that would serve him well in his studies. He emerged at the top of his class at Muiteithia Primary when he sat the Certificate of Primary Education (CPE) exams in 1973.

He went to Nyahururu High School, where he scored a Division 1 in the Kenya Certificate of Education (KCE) in 1977, earning favour in the eyes of Fr Sella and Fr Bragnolo.

With their help, he won a scholarship to St Augustine Seminary Mabaga in Bungoma, a college affiliated to The Vatican, where he earned a bachelor of arts degree in philosophy.

In 1983, he received a BA in theology from the Pontifical Urbaniana University in Rome as one of the first African graduates.

After bringing home honours in philosophy, African studies and theology, on December 15, 1984, the young, energised Matthew Theuri was ordained a priest for Ngandu Catholic Parish in Nyeri by the late Archbishop Nicodemus Kirima, assisted by John Cardinal Njue (then Embu Catholic Bishop) and Archbishop Peter Kairu (then Murang’a Catholic Bishop).

He worked as a priest and a vocations director for Nyeri, Nyandarua, Murang’a, Meru and Embu before going for further studies in the United States, where he remained for 15 years.

Today he holds three doctorates in theology, philosophy and educational psychology. It was when he joined Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania that thoughts about marriage first crossed his mind.

Catholic crucifix

“I lived the life of a saint and never did I remove the Catholic crucifix, not even in the bathroom,” he said.

But, as scandals surfaced in the US Catholic Church involving priests and parishioners, he began asking questions.

“I became diplomatic and questioned everything I deemed wrong,” he said, adding that many of the priests preached water but drank wine.

“They encouraged us to be poor for God’s people, obedient to our elders and to practise celibacy; we followed their teachings, but they did not.”

“I realised that while we, the student priests, practised chastity and lived saintly lives, some priests had girlfriends, and others were even married,” he said.

“I felt cheated.”

Bishop Theuri had always adored the family as a union and, while he respected his mother, he loved his brother and sister dearly.

“I asked myself: if I was brought forth by a man and woman to this beautiful family, shouldn’t I bring forth children for continuity?”

When he informed his mother about his intention to marry, he got another shock.

“Ardent Roman Catholic that she was, I expected her to say no outright, but all she said was, ‘It is your choice, my son. I will support you’, and I saw a wise and knowledgeable woman in her,” he said with a smile.

The priest made up his mind to have a family at an opportune moment, and it came in 1995 while at Catholic University where he was a social sciences lecturer. He met and fell in love with Maryanne Nyambura, a colleague and lecturer in philosophy.

Church’s teachings

But Nyambura was from a staunch Roman Catholic background and did not buy the idea. In fact, she reminded him that he was a priest and by marrying he would go against the church’s teachings.

“ I had known him as a very serious man; a man of his word,” she said.

“I knew he was a committed Catholic, hence I did not take him seriously. I told him he was a making a lifelong commitment and should not joke about it,” Nyambura told Lifestyle.

“I was very apprehensive,” she added, “I didn’t know how his priest friends, his relatives and my family would take it. It was very difficult for me and I had to take time for the idea to sink in,” she said.

“Mine was love at first sight,” the bishop said, “and, though she instantly turned me down saying I was a priest and was not allowed to marry, there was no turning back.”

“And when she finally agreed, seeing that I was a man of my word, she was to be my first and last girlfriend.”

They married in 1995 in a traditional ceremony. Afterwards, he could no longer work at Catholic University to avoid what he calls “unnecessary tension,” and kept a low profile on religious matters, concentrating on teaching.

He switched to Egerton University in 1995, where he was a lecturer and later became dean of Faculty of Arts. Former colleagues say he was accessible to everyone and well liked.

Always listen

“He would never wait for anyone to greet him but would say a hello at everyone, including the cleaner,” said Peter Sang, one of the faculty employees.

“He would always listen to you, and many students sought his help when in social and financial problems,” said Jessy Ambani, a former student who is now a banker in Nakuru town.

Bishop Theuri and his wife have four children between nine and 15 years: Edda, Idda and twins Stephanie and Edward.

“When we had our first child, I held her in my arms and felt joy melt my system. I could see my own product in that little angel,” he recalled.

He believes in self-reliance as the first step towards self sustainability and says “bishops can be teachers, nurses and doctors; they should earn something to serve their needs and help the people of God.”

After marrying, he gradually made links with the Ecumenical Catholic Church of Christ of Kenya and was subsequently consecrated on March 28 this year to head the church in Nairobi and Central Kenya region in a colourful ceremony attended by most of his friends, workmates and former students.

While officiating at the consecration, Archbishop Karl Raymond Rodiq described him as “a humble and happy man who, like the biblical Jonah, tried to get out of God’s ministry but has been trapped again,” something Bishop Theuri agrees with.

Consecrated bishops

The consecration brought to three the number of former Roman Catholic priests who have left that church and have been consecrated bishops in the Ecumenical Catholic Church of Christ.

The other two are the Most Reverend Godfrey Siundu of Kitale and the Most Reverend Benedict Simiyu of Bungoma. There are currently 22 former Roman Catholic priests serving in the Ecumenical Church in Kenya.

“If a priest chooses to marry, he should be allowed to serve the church and not be thrown out,” said Dr Theuri.

Nyambura says the cleric has been a wonderful husband and the best father she could ever imagine.

“His desire for a family has made him love us very much. He had longed for children. Even before we got ours, he loved other people’s children,” she said.

Source: Daily Nation

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